Studs and Duds for the Browns from Week 1

Week 1 of the 2020 NFL season is finally in the books and if you are a Cleveland Browns fan it was like every Week 1 in years past.

Week 1 of the 2020 NFL season is finally in the books. If you are a Cleveland Browns fan it was like every Week 1 of years past, with our beloved Browns getting blown out. The Lamar Jackson-led Ravens dismantled Cleveland to a tune of 38-6 in Kevin Stefanski’s coaching debut.

Studs

Nick Chubb: Kareem Hunt was actually the leading rusher with 13 carries for 72 yards, but Chubb ran with more authority and was clearly robbed of opportunities with only 10 carries for 60 yards. The Browns were never in a position to win this contest, but had Chubb gotten more carries, perhaps the bleeding could have been slowed.

David Njoku: Writing this puts a smile on my face. Njoku has taken over the role of the most polarizing player on the Browns roster with half of the fan base screaming for him to be traded. The fact is Njoku is good and he proved that against Baltimore. Njoku was the second-leading Browns receiver with three receptions for 50 yards and the only touchdown.

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Tavierre Thomas: The first sack of the season goes to none other than defensive back, Tavierre Thomas. He is not an All-Pro caliber player and still had some lapses in this contest, but this is a guy who played three defensive snaps all of last season and was forced to played a lot in the opener. Thomas plays with high energy and demonstrated that this week.

Duds

Austin Seibert: Another controversial player, it feels like some fans are rooting against Seibert due to the franchise using a draft pick on him in 2019. This portion of the fan base is smiling today. Siebert missed an extra point and a 41-yard field goal and Twitter is on fire rooting for his exit.

Odell Beckham Jr.: I saw someone compare Beckham to Greg Little and I couldn’t help but laugh, but that is the perfect summary of what OBJ did on Sunday. The offense went from not including him into the plan to Baker Mayfield forcing every pass in his direction. Although some of that is not his fault, the awful drop on 3rd-and-2 will go down in history.

Baker Mayfield: Mayfield was forcing too many of his passes in the second half to OBJ and they were not wise choices. He looked frantic and inaccurate. Although I think that is fair for Week 1 with a shortened offseason, some fans are not as forgiving. Mayfield finished completing 21 of 39 attempts for 189 yards with only one touchdown and an interception.

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Twitter reacts to Baker Mayfield’s rough outing vs. the Ravens

It was a bad game for Baker Mayfield and Twitter let him know it

Week 1 did not go well for just about anyone in a Cleveland Browns uniform. The Baltimore Ravens blasted the overmatched, underprepared visitors from Cleveland

Many Browns had bad games, too many to mention. But none are more important to the team’s fate than Baker Mayfield, and the young quarterback had an awful Week 1.

It started with two deflected passes on the opening drive, the second of which was picked off. It never really got much better. A tentative, inaccurate Mayfield finished 21-of-39 for just 189 yards and a QB Rating of 65.0.

As expected, Twitter brought out the butcher knives and let Mayfield have it. We had to filter out the tweets including profanity, which was a startlingly high percentage…

It did not get much better for Baker after that first drive. And the critics made sure to pile on…

https://twitter.com/danorlovsky7/status/1305227315803234306?s=20

Former NFL tackle George Foster, who knows him some bad quarterbacks from his playing career, summed up succinctly what many were thinking,

Browns rookie LT Jedrick Wills leaves Week 1 with a leg injury

Wills left the game in Baltimore in the 3rd quarter

A poor opening week for the Cleveland Browns got even worse in Baltimore. Late in the third quarter of the Browns pending blowout loss to the Ravens, starting left tackle Jedrick Wills left the game with a leg injury.

Initial reports indicate Wills is questionable to return, though that seems unlikely given the lopsided deficit and the report from CBS sideline reporter Evan Washburn that Wills could barely put any weight on the injured leg.

Kendall Lamm took over at left tackle for Wills, the Browns’ first-round pick out of Alabama. The Browns play again on Thursday night, so Wills will not get much time to rehabilitate.

Watch: David Njoku scores the Browns first TD of 2020

Njoku benefitted from a brilliant play-fake by Baker Mayfield

The Cleveland Browns scored their first points of the 2020 season thanks to David Njoku.

Late in the first quarter, the Browns capped off a strong drive by fooling the Baltimore Ravens with a deceptive formation and a brilliant use of play action from Baker Mayfield to find an uncovered Njoku in the back left corner of the end zone.

The Browns had run the ball impressively on the drive, notably a 22-yard Kareem Hunt to set up the Browns with 1st-and-goal at the Ravens 2-yard line. Deploying a heavy formation with multiple tight ends, they convinced the Ravens it was going to be a run.

Mayfield sold the play-fake beautifully and Njoku had no problem securing the Browns’ first points of the 2020 season.

Alas, Austin Seibert missed the extra point and the Browns could only cut the Ravens lead to 10-6. It’s still a great play from the Browns offense.

Behind Enemy Lines: Breaking down Baltimore with Ravens Wire

Behind Enemy Lines: Breaking down the Browns matchup in Baltimore with Ravens Wire

The new season is upon us. The Cleveland Browns take on a familiar foe in Week 1 with the trip to face AFC North rival Baltimore Ravens.

Many things remain the same in Baltimore, but this is a different Ravens team that made some significant changes in the offseason. To get more info about Cleveland’s opening foe, I turned to Ravens Wire and editor Matt Stevens for some help.

Stevens graciously provided some great answers that should help Browns fans get a better feel for Sunday’s opponent.

Lamar Jackson is coming off a magical season. How close to replicating his MVP run can he come in 2020?

I think as we saw last year, Jackson has all the tools necessary to win an MVP award. But as physically gifted as he is, there was certainly a little luck and surprise element to last year’s impressive performance that helped get him there. If he wants to repeat in the same way he did last year, it’ll mean he’s running a ton yet again in 2020, which isn’t something the Ravens and even Jackson himself seemed super excited about in their offseason press conferences.

I think we see Jackson’s rushing ability take a backseat to the deep ball this season. He made a conscious effort to improve as a passer last year and we saw the end results. This offseason, he said he spent a lot of time working on the deep ball and believed it’s what’s needed to take the offense to the next level. If he holds true to that, Jackson is going to need to become far more consistent in his mechanics and protect the ball better.

That means not trying to win every game on every play and instead, realizing he can throw the ball away or go with the safer option instead of trying to carry the team himself.

How will the targets in the passing game get divvied up?

This is a really tough question because we’re not entirely sure how this offense will look this season. Last year, there was no mistaking that Baltimore was a run-first team. This year with the addition of two more wide receivers in the 2020 NFL Draft, the Ravens could actually have a surprisingly good passing attack that doesn’t necessarily need the run game to succeed to work.

At the same time, with four running backs capable of starting most places in this league, there’s little reason to go away from what they know works.

Still, I think tight end Mark Andrews is the top dog in this passing attack. He’s got a ton of speed for someone standing at 6-foot-5 and 256 pounds, and he’s a very skilled route runner. But I’d be shocked if Marquise Brown didn’t come close to tying Andrews’ targets in this game. Brown’s finally healthy and he was deadly fast last year with a foot injury slowing him down. With some questions in Cleveland’s secondary, as well as a newly acquired safety, Brown has a real chance to end this game early if he gets going like he did Week 1 last year.

Beyond those two guys, it’s a real guessing game where the targets go. This offense is built upon forcing defenses to choose which player they want to defend and going the polar opposite direction. If the Browns stack the box to stop the run, Jackson is going to air the ball out, which means guys like Devin Duvernay could be in line for more targets. If the reverse happens, Willie Snead and the running backs in underneath routes will be the primary read.

Who are some of the important newcomers to the team, and specifically how will the Ravens replace Marshal Yanda?

The addition of Calais Campbell really can’t be overstated. He was a beast in Jacksonville in 2017 and 2018 before a drop in production last year. But he’s motivated to prove he’s still a 10-plus sack guy and he knows he was brought in to shore up the run defense. He dominated throughout training camp but this isn’t an easy defense to digest even in the best of offseasons, so we’ll see just how quickly Campbell got up to speed and how much he still has in the tank.

The Ravens are hoping Patrick Queen is their next Ray Lewis or C.J. Mosley — the only two other inside linebackers Baltimore has drafted in the first round. His inexperience at LSU was downplayed by the team all offseason and it seems they’re going to let him go out there and rip it up with the understanding he’ll make some mistakes and hopefully quite a few big plays. But with no preseason action, it’s a little muddy just how ready for primetime Queen actually is. But with his speed, he’s liable to make the Browns pay for testing him at some point.

Baltimore is being really coy with their starting offensive line but it seems like it’s D.J. Fluker’s job for right now. Though he had a rough time in recent years, he’s clearly as motivated as ever, dropping 22% body fat this offseason and saying all the right things. He got a ton of reps with the first team throughout training camp and the Ravens almost always go with the veteran option if a rookie is competing for a starting job as well. All offensive linemen are big but Fluker is just a behemoth of a human being and I’m excited to see what Fluker looks like with a chip on his shoulder.

The Earl Thomas saga dominated the headlines. How well-equipped are the Ravens to move on without him in the secondary?

If you listen to the Ravens, you’d think they practically planned it and were moving on from Thomas because they had a better player behind him. But in reality, DeShon Elliott, Thomas’ replacement, is unproven and frequently hurt. He’s ended up on injured reserve in both of the seasons he’s been in the league, playing just six games in a reserve role.

But when healthy, Elliott is a heat-seeking missile. He’s not nearly as adept at Thomas in coverage but you’re not liable to see him become a lead blocker for Derrick Henry either. I have no doubt the Browns will test him early and often but I’d also expect him to blow someone up over the middle at some point in this game. Real boom or bust play from Elliott’s short career, and I mean the “boom” part literally.

Who wins and why?

I think the Ravens walk away with the win but it’s going to be close. Baltimore clearly looked at everything happening this offseason and chose the path with fewer waves. They’ve retained almost all of last year’s 14-2 roster, seeing only one change in the starting lineup on offense. While there are four new starters on defense, they’re all head-and-shoulder better than last year’s counterpart.

The Ravens clearly wanted continuity and I think that’s a strategy to start the season off hopefully more in sync than the rest of the league. While every other team has a bunch of new moving parts or a new coach, Baltimore is effectively going into Week 1 with the same squad that played in Week 17. That’s the difference in this game as the Browns struggle to get on the same page at times. Ravens 23 – Browns 20

Sheldon Richardson: ‘I’m ready to hit someone else’ instead of Browns teammates

Richardson is ready to take on Lamar Jackson and the Ravens in Week 1

Browns defensive end Sheldon Richardson is ready for some football. More specifically, he’s ready to play against someone other than his own Browns teammates.

With no preseason and no joint practices, Richardson and the rest of the Browns haven’t had an opportunity to test themselves or take out aggression on anyone but themselves. The veteran defensive lineman is ready for that to change.

“I’m definitely tired of hitting my own teammates,” Richardson said in his Zoom press conference with reporters on Thursday. “I’m ready to hit someone else.”

One of the people he’s hoping to hit is Ravens QB Lamar Jackson. Richardson has a lot of respect for the reigning NFL MVP.

“To me, it’s like he’s playing Madden (video game) out there, honestly.”

Richardson will get his chance to hit some Ravens, including Jackson, on Sunday at 1 p.m. ET.

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Browns Week 1 game strategy: How to slow down Lamar Jackson?

A look at some ways the Browns can try to stop the reigning NFL MVP

The Baltimore Ravens and Cleveland Browns will kickoff their 2020 season at M&T Stadium in Baltimore on Sunday at 1:00 p.m. ET. The Browns have not been dealt the best of hands as they try to implement new schemes with new coaches, in a limited period of time. To top it all off they have to start by trying to stop one of the league’s best offenses.

When it comes to stopping the Ravens offense, it starts with slowing down the extremely talented and ridiculously quick Lamar Jackson. Teams have tried a number of schemes and methods, but not many have actually generated distinct results. So with the Browns ready to take the challenge first in 2020, let’s look at what has worked in some measure against Jackson and the Ravens.

1. Spy

The Tennessee Titans are one of the few success stories against the Ravens offense, beating them in M&T Bank Stadium during the divisional round of the 2019 playoffs. Titans HC Mike Vrabel put together a masterful game plan that threw anything and everything at Jackson. He still passed for 365 yards and rushed for 143, but they held him to one touchdown and most importantly defeated them 28-12.

The takeaway from what the Titans did against Jackson is the way that they deployed the quarterback spy. Along with Vrabel’s special concoction of different defensive looks, they often had a player assigned to mirror Jackson’s movements. Usually this is a linebacker or box safety, but the Titans switched their spy regularly throughout the game. They used a combination of linebackers, defensive backs and often defensive lineman who would drop into the middle of the field and spy Jackson as he darted in and out of the pocket.

2. Unicorn Defense

One of the other games that is bookmarked as a success in slowing down Jackson was the Ravens 2018 playoff loss to the Los Angeles Chargers. According to Next Gen Stats, the Chargers used seven defensive backs on 58 of 59 defensive snaps versus the Ravens in the Wild Card round. Across the NFL that season, there were only 353 total defensive plays with seven DBs on the field (50 by the Chargers). Los Angeles allowed 3.9 yards per play with seven defensive backs versus the Ravens.

“We needed some fast guys, right? We needed guys who could run sideline to sideline and still help in the passing game if they got fooled,”  Chargers safety Rayshawn Jenkins told MMQB. Not saying our linebackers couldn’t do it, but let’s be honest, DBs are faster than linebackers.”

Strangely enough, teams have rarely been willing to go to the extremes of playing with seven defensive backs on the field against the Ravens, despite the Chargers’ success.

3. Make him throw outside the Numbers

Jackson has thoroughly proved his doubters wrong with his throwing ability. It was on full display last year as he won the NFL’s MVP award. Still, he has areas where he can improve and if we know anything about him, he spent his offseason doing just that.

It is worth noting though that teams have had more success against Jackson when forcing him to throw to the outside, specifically outside the numbers on the field. A good deal of the Ravens pass game action is designed to get players open in the middle of the field.

The Titans did a good job of taking some of this away and forcing Jackson to throw to the sidelines. Until he proves that he can make those throws on a consistent basis, defenses should be trying to take the middle of the field away from him.